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Li Jisheng's resume was born in 1896, in the late Qing Dynasty and the early Republic of China.
Li Ji (1896.6.2-1979.8.1) is an anthropologist, a modern archaeologist in China and the father of archaeology in China. Accept the word and change it to help it. Hubei Zhongxiang Zhongying people. 19 1 1 was admitted to Tsinghua University, an American preparatory school. He stayed in the United States with the official fee of 19 18, studied psychology at Clark University in Massachusetts, and changed his major in demography the next year. 1920 after obtaining a master's degree in sociology, he transferred to Harvard University to study structural anthropology and obtained a doctorate in philosophy. From 65438 to 0922, Li Ji graduated from Harvard University and returned to China. He was hired as a professor of anthropology and sociology by Nankai University.

Overview:

Li Ji (1896 July 12- 1979 August 1), born in Zhongxiang, Hubei, is an anthropologist in Taiwan Province, China.

19 18, graduated from Tsinghua University, then went to the United States to study, and studied at Clark University in Massachusetts to study for a master's degree in psychology and sociology.

1920 entered the anthropology department of Harvard University. Under the guidance of ethnographer Roland Dixon and physical anthropologist Ernest Horton, he completed his thesis "The Formation of the China Nation" in 1923, thus obtaining a doctorate in anthropology and returning to China in the same year.

Personal data:

1924, field archaeology begins.

From 65438 to 0925, 29-year-old Li Ji worked as an anthropology lecturer in Tsinghua University Institute of Chinese Studies, under the guidance of four famous teachers (Liang Qichao, Wang Guowei, Chen Yinque and Zhao Yuanren).

1926, Li Ji excavated the Neolithic site in Yin Xi Village, Xia County, Shaanxi Province, which was the earliest archaeological excavation independently conducted by China scholars.

At the beginning of 1929, he was hired as the director of the Archaeological Group of the Institute of History and Linguistics of Academia Sinica, and led and participated in the field archaeological excavations of Yinxu in Anyang and Chengziya in Zhangqiu, which put the excavation work on a scientific track and produced the first batch of high-level archaeologists in China.

1936 went to Europe to give lectures; 1938 was elected honorary member of the Royal Society of Anthropology; 1948 went to Taiwan Province Province with the archaeological team and was elected academician of Academia Sinica.

1949- 1950 concurrently holds the post of professor of Taiwan Province Provincial University and presides over the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology. 1955 ~ 1972 director of Taiwan Province institute of history and language. 1946 also participated in the work of the Japanese government delegation in China, claiming for Japanese cultural relics looted by the Japanese army during its invasion of China. He and Wu Jinding visited the Chengziya site together (Wu Jinding discovered it in advance and visited it many times) and made the first small-scale excavation. He is one of the pioneers of archaeological work in Shandong and the editor-in-chief of Chengziya.

Mainly devoted to the research of pottery and bronze wares in Yin Ruins, including Prehistoric Remains of Yin Xi Village, Series of Pottery in Yin Ruins and Collection of Archaeology in Li Ji. And co-authored a special issue on the study of ancient artifacts.